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jSmith

A pure JS template engine.

Implementation and use

jSmith uses web components. There are a few autonomous custom elements for specific use-cases, and a customized built-in element provided for every tag listed in jSmith/config.js. Any tag may be added. Creation of a customized extension happens automatically based on this list. The customized extensions have the same name, only prefixed with j- or any other prefix provided in the config. Both automonous and customized built-in elements provided by jSmith are instanceof JElem, which is a "mixin", that extends HTMLElement by default, but any other constructor may be provided:

class extends JElem(HTMLImageElement) // is used for j-img
class extends JElem(HTMLElement)      // is used for autonomous elements
class extends JElem()                 // HTMLElement is the default superclass

All necessary methods and properties are implemented as symbol properties (there is a custom symbol registry), so no conflicts should arise from extending more complicated elements. Most of the functions used on these elements are implemented as methods of JElemWrap which is a wrapper around any element, that provides special functionality to those that are instanceof JElem and some minor additions for other elements as well:

new JElemWrap(elem) // constructing the wrap
jWrap(elem)         // shorthand function
jWrap(elem).load()  // example use

If the tag is listed in config.js it may be extended directly in HTML as usual:

<img is="j-img">

jSmith then operates mostly on elements that are instanceof JElem and ignores others. This way, there is no overhead in loading of elements and parts of the document, that do not use the JElem extension. JElem children load is defered until their connection and their JElem parent's context load* and may wait for any user-provided data, that is a Promise.

*) TODO: Currently it is defered until full load, which is unnesessary.

JElem elements support special data- attributes, that perform all the templating functionality.

Context

All the following data- attributes accept plain JS as their value, which is evaluated in the element's context. JElem elements may have their own context provided with the data-context attribute. Any JS object (or a Promise) is expected. JElem elements also inherit contexts of their JElem parents. Nested element's context potentially shadows their parent's contexts. The default context is the global scope*, so any window properties or globally defined (in non-module mode) variables may be used in JElem element's special data- attributes right away, including the data-context attribute. Once the data-context attribute is set, the given context is added to all the previous contexts of the element and any other special data- attribute now accepts names in the resulting contexts.

*) TODO: Some sort of "sandbox" for this evaluation istead of just using the global context.

const pageData = {
    title: 'jSmith test',
    color: '#faee32'
}
<head is="j-head" data-context="pageData">
    <title is="j-title" data-text="title"></title>
    <meta is="j-meta" name="theme-color" data-attr-content="color">
</head>

pageData is set globally, so it may be used in the data-context attribute to set the context of j-head. j-title then inherits this context and accepts title from pageData in its data-text attribute. Same goes for the j-meta element.

Text & attributes

Two basic HTML manipulation tools are currently implemented: data-text and data-attr-. data-text accepts any JS expression, that is then evaluated in the current context and its value is set as the innerText of the element. data-attr- is a (potentially infinitie) set of attributes, that serve as setters for any other attribute. data-attr-some-attribute evaluates its value in the current context and sets it as a value of some-attribute attribute of the element.

<head is="j-head" data-context="pageData">
    <title is="j-title" data-text="title"></title>
    <meta is="j-meta" name="theme-color" data-attr-content="color">
</head>

The example above results in:

<head is="j-head" data-context="pageData">
    <title is="j-title" data-text="title">jSmith test</title>
    <meta is="j-meta" name="theme-color" data-attr-content="color" content="#faee32">
</head>

TODO: Some sort of "clean-up" mode that removes all the special data- attributes afterwards. However it is sometimes important to keep these attributes as they carry information that might be used later, for example when the whole element is moved elsewhere and is expected to be reloaded in the new context. In the following examples, some of the special data- attributes will be removed in the "result examples" just for the sake of visual simpliity.

Conditions

The first "built-in"* structure processing is the data-if condition. When its value is evaluated as falsey, the whole element's loading process is aborted and the element is immediately deleted. Since the loading process is aborted, a jLoad event is never triggered. This is an event, that the children are waiting for, before they can start their own loading process. The children of such element are therefore never loaded.

*) Additional processing may be defined in special callbacks, that are called at particular time during the "built-in" loading process. This will be demonstrated later.

Loops

The second "built-in" structure processing is looping which is expressed with the data-loop attribute. Its value is evaluated and possibly reset to [], if it's not an iterable object. The whole element is then coppied for (const item of value) and the individual coppies are assigned an internal context of item. The internal context is the same context, that is set by data-context, but set internally without the use of data-context. It usually doesn't refer to any named object specified in the whole context chain, but rather to some object created "on the fly" with no name associated with it. So the object has no name, that might be used in the data-context attribute. To keep the internal implementation and the "visble" state of the HTML document in sync, any data-context attribute is removed when setting the internal context, and replaced by data-internal-context attribute with no value.

The original element is then removed and its loading process is aborted, the jElem event is never triggered, and its children are never loaded.

So the loop iterates over values of the given object. To iterate over keys or the whole entries, an additional helper function must be used, that may be used right in the data-loop attribute value, as all the special data- attributes accept any JS expression, that can be evaluated in the current context. For example:

window.pageData = {
  articles: [
    {
      title: 'Article Title',
      thumbnail: 'thumbnail.jpg',
      content: [
        ['h3', 'Some Title'],
        ['p', 'text...'],
        ['p', 'another text...'],
        ['h3', 'Other Title'],
        ['p', 'yet another text...'],
        ['img', 'pic.jpg']
      ]
    }
    // etc ...
  ],
  fn: {
    labelKeyval: (obj, k, v) => Object.entries(obj).map(([key, val]) => ({ [k]: key, [v]: val })),
    labelList: (arr, ...labels) => arr.map(list => [...zip(labels, list)].reduce((acc, [label, item]) => (acc[label] = item, acc), {}))
  }
}
<body is="j-body" data-context="pageData">
    <article is="j-article" data-loop="articles">
        <j-tmp data-loop="fn.labelList(content, 'tag', 'val')">
            <img
                is="j-img"
                data-case="tag == 'img'"
                data-attr-src="val">
        </j-tmp>
    </article>
</body>

In the example above, the j-article element is looped over pageData.articles and becomes:

<body is="j-body" data-context="pageData">
    <article is="j-article" data-internal-context>
        <j-tmp data-loop="fn.labelList(content, 'tag', 'val')">
            <img
                is="j-img"
                data-if="tag == 'img'"
                data-attr-src="val">
        </j-tmp>
    </article>
    <!-- etc... -->
</body>

The internal context of the first j-article is pageData.articles[0]. content in the following data-loop refers to pageData.articles[0].content now. The fn.labelList function transforms it into the following format:

[
  {
    tag: 'h3',
    val: 'Some Tite'
  },
  {
    tag: 'p',
    val: 'text...'
  }
  // etc...
]

The j-tmp element is then looped over this object, and the individual items {tag: '...', val: '...'} are set as internal contexts of the individual coppies of the looped j-tmp element. As a result, tag and val are valid names to be used inside the loop. The j-img element then demonstrates the use of data-if and data-attr- attributes.

This will choose only the img tags in the given data and will result in:

<body is="j-body" data-context="pageData">
    <article is="j-article" data-internal-context>
        <img is="j-img" src="pic.jpg">
    </article>
    <!-- etc... -->
</body>

(The temporary wrapping functionality of j-tmp will be explained later.)

Switch

j-switch is an autonomous custom element, that is built on top of the internal ("built-in") loading process of JElem elements. During the loading proccess of JElem elements, a few callbacks are called on the element at different stages:

  • [Symbol.for('customPreLoad')] is called after checking whether the element is to be removed based on data-if.
  • [Symbol.for('customLoad')] is called after checking whether the element is to be looped vased on data-loop.
  • [Symbol.for('customPostLoad')] is called after innerText and attributes have been set based on data-text and data-attr-.

So customPreLoad is never called on data-if removed elements and customLoad (and customPostLoad) is never called on data-loop looped elements (only on their copies).

These callbacks may be used to build on top of the existing process as do the autonomous custom elements provided by jSmith.

j-switch is a temporary wrapper element, that introduces a few special data- attributes for its direct children. j-switch checks its children's data-case attributes and selects the first one with a truthy value of this attribute. It then keeps only this element, inserts it at the original position of the j-switch element and removes itself along with all the other children. The default case may be provided with data-case="true" or a data-default-case shorthand. This is not an exact replica of the standard switch in JS and other languages. j-switch only chooses the first element with truthy data-case value, so the "default case" (even when using the data-case-default shorthand) must always be the last one.

Tmp

Another autonomous custom element providing the temporary wrapping functionality (and the temporary wrapping functionality only) is j-tmp. j-tmp may have its own context (as any other JElem element) that is inherited by its children. However, this context is assigned as internal context of the children along with their previous context. The same idea of shadowing is applied even here, so the result is the same, as if the children simply inherited the context. It then inserts its children at the original position of the j-tmp element and removes itself. Unlike j-switch which keeps and then "unwraps" only the one child, j-tmp keeps all of its childNodes, including text and comments.

Tag casting

The idea of type casting is incorporated into jSmith as tag casting. jSmith provides an autonomous custom element j-any, that may be "casted" to any tag at "run time" - it may be converted to a tag, the name of which is known only after evaluating some expressions in some contexts provided in the special data- attributes. The resulting tag to cast to is specified in the data-cast attribute.

Based on the previous example:

<j-tmp data-loop="fn.labelList(content, 'tag', 'val')">
    <j-switch>
        <img
            is="j-img"
            data-case="tag == 'img'"
            data-attr-src="val">
        <j-any
            data-cast="tag"
            data-default-case
            data-text="val"></j-any>
    </j-switch>
</j-tmp>

The j-tmp element is looped over the modified array of {tag: '...', val: '...'} objects. The children of j-switch then use the tag variable to decide whether they're the right tags for the current item and the val variable to set some kind of value based on the tag type. If tag == 'img', the j-img element is chosen and it then sets its src attribute to val. Otherwise, the j-any element is chosen and it is then casted to a <${tag} is="j-${tag}"> element, which then sets its innerText to val.

Promises

Often the page data must be aquired from some kind of server-side API. These requests to the server take some time and are usually implemented in JS with the fetch API, that works with Promises. jSmith accepts data for the contexts as Promises. The loading of the JElem elements is divided into a few stages. The first one is synchronous and calles the next one as an asynchronous function. The following stages are performed asynchronously and may at some point wait for some data from the contexts to resolve. Any data may be provided as a Promise, it is then automatically recognized as a Promise, the loading process halts and waits for it to be resolved, then uses the resolved value.

TODO: There is no need to wait with the jLoad event once the most imporant data (such the context itself and maybe conditions and loops) is resolved.

For example, the articles from the example above may be aquired by some async function fetchArticles, that returns a promise:

const pageData = {
  color: '#faee32',
  title: 'jSmith test',
  articles: fetchArticles()
}

Current code structure

The current code structure is temporary. It demonstrates an example HTML document index.html along with the basic data setup in main.js (and some additional tools in tools.js and iaerhy.js) that includes jSmith/evaluator.js and jSmith/main.js. The jSmith/evaluator.js uses with, which is not deprecated, but prohibited in strict mode (enabled automatically in modular code). with is often not recomended in JS, but in this particular case, it does exactly the job that needs to be done. Implementing this manually would mean parsing the whole JS expressions inside the data- attributes, which would bring even more overhead, that the with does. So the evaluator must be defined globally in evaluator.js and the whole file must be included separately. The rest of the code is modular.

In jSmith/:

main.js simply imports the init/define.js file, that imports all the needed custom elements constructors and defines them.

config.js contains the configuration of the supported elements to be extended and the HTML prefix.

evaluator.js is the only non-modular piece of code and provides the globally defined evaluator, that evaluates the given expression in the given contexts.

logger.js provides the logger object for debugging purposes and logging in general.

Other root files provide some misc. mainly functional tools with use of some proxies etc.

init/ contains scripts, that are to be executed once upon initializations. Currently, only the define.js is used, that imports and defines the custom elements.

components/ contains the the JElem mixin in jelem.js and all the custom element's constructors either in separate files (such as page.js) or in collections (such as utilities.js and control.js).

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Another take on pure JS template engine.

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